Canine Program Management
This course focuses on the administrative and supervisory responsibilities that follow K9 deployments and apprehensions. Instruction covers what post-apprehension follow-ups should include, how incidents are documented, and how records.











Class overview
This course focuses on the administrative and supervisory responsibilities that follow K9 deployments and apprehensions. Instruction covers what post-apprehension follow-ups should include, how incidents are documented, and how records should be retained. This course addresses common problem areas such as accidental bites, dog injuries or deaths, and how those events should be investigated. Emphasis is placed on bite reporting standards, training documentation, and supervisory review practices that reduce liability exposure.
This session explains:
- what post-apprehension follow-ups should include, how incidents are documented
- how records should be retained
- the administrative and supervisory responsibilities that follow K9 deployments and apprehensions.
- Instruction covers what post-apprehension follow-ups should include, how incidents are documented, and how records should be retained.






Zach Pfannenstiel
Zach brings over 18 years of law enforcement experience, including more than 12 years in canine operations. His background includes extensive expertise in training, leadership, management, and tactical deployments. He currently serves as the Training Sergeant assigned to the Canine Unit, where he leads instruction in areas such as canine academies, E-collar use, SWAT/K9 integration, and problem-solving. Zach manages a large canine program consisting of over 40 working teams and developed a Field Training Officer (FTO) program specifically for K9 handlers. He is a recognized, court-certified expert in animal behavior, police canine handling, and use of force. He is the CEO of Echelon K9, where he oversees all operations related to the training of law enforcement and military canine teams.








Secure your seat at HITS 2026
Legal defensibility is not theoretical. It is tested in court.
This class helps handlers and agencies prepare before that moment arrives.

Explore other HITS classes
The Drug Canine Legal Update is one part of a broader HITS program designed to strengthen deployment judgment, detection reliability, and operational decision-making in the field. Additional sessions expand that learning across tracking, behavior, detection science, and tactical leadership.









